Tito and His Comrades

(Steven Felgate) #1

Notes to Pages 353–358 509


Estimative Products on Yugoslavia, ed. Thomas Fingar (Pittsburgh, PA: GPO, 2006), 530;
AS, Dedijer, t. e. 111.



  1. Guštin, “Teritorialna obramba,” 281.

  2. Bilandžić, Hrvatska moderna povijest, 527.

  3. Jože Smole, Pred usodnimi odločitvami (Ljubljana: Založba ČZP Enotnost, 1992),
    46, 47.

  4. TNA, FCO 28/1647; “NIE 15-79, Prospects for Post-Tito Yugoslavia, Vol. II—
    Annexes, 25 September 1979,” in Yugoslavia: From “National Communism” to National Col-
    lapse; US Intelligence Community Estimative Products on Yugoslavia, ed. Thomas Fingar
    (Pittsburgh, PA: GPO, 2006), 607.

  5. Nenadović, Razgovori s Kočom, 145.

  6. AS, Dedijer, t. e. 68; t. e. 261; t. e. 264.

  7. Mile Bjelajac, “JLA v šestdesetih in v prvi polovici sedemdesetih,” in Slovenija-
    Jugoslavija: Krize in reforme 1968/1988, ed. Zdenko Čepič (Ljubljana: Inštitut za novejšo
    zgodovino, 2010), 93, 94; Guštin, “Teritorialna obramba,” 283; NARA, CREST, “The Role
    of the Military in the Yugoslav System,” Weekly Summary Special Report, 20 June 1989.

  8. NARA, Pol 15-8 Yugo, Belgrade, 8 November 1966.

  9. BA, DY 30/IV 2/21/8077.

  10. Dabčević-Kučar, ’71: Hrvatski snovi, 1:452.

  11. Ridley, Tito, 383.

  12. PA, B 12, Band 547.

  13. Languages were particularly important because they defined national identity—
    they were a way to be patriotic about one’s ethnicity within the Yugoslav context.

  14. AS, Dedijer, t. e. 188.

  15. AJ, KPR II-4-a, K 163; Radina Vučetić, Monopol na istinu: Partija, kultura i cen-
    zura u Srbiji šezdesetih i sedamdesetih godina XX veka (Belgrade: CLIO, 2016), 154–69.

  16. NSK, Arhiv Bakarić, Kutija 47.

  17. AJ, 836, LF, II-1/78; Dabčević-Kučar, ’71: Hrvatski snovi, 2:822.

  18. Matunović, Titova sovladarica, 121; Bilandžić, Povijest izbliza, 191, 246.

  19. AJ, KPR II-4-a, K 166; NARA, CREST, “Yugoslavia: The Kosovo Problem;
    A Research Paper,” 21 April 1979.

  20. AJ, KPR II-4-b, K 169.

  21. AJ, KPR, II-4-b, K 169; Bilandžić, Povijest izbliza, 68. Kosovo had been a part of
    the medieval Serbian Kingdom until it was conquered by the Turks. It was only recon-
    quered by Serbia in 1913. Serbs considered the region to be the cradle of their nation,
    despite the fact that the majority living there were Albanian.

  22. Ćosić, Piščevi zapisi, 2:10, 11, 202, 203, 275.

  23. NARA, CREST, CIA, “Yugoslavia. An Intelligence Appraisal,” 27 July 1971.

  24. Serbo-Croatian, Slovenian, Macedonian, Hungarian, Italian, Slovakian, Roma-
    nian, Albanian, Turkish, Rusyn, Bulgarian.

  25. AJ 837, KPR, II-a, K 168; Swain, Tito, 149–51.

  26. AAB, Arkiv Stoltenberg, Thorvald, “The Outlook for Yugoslavia 1969–1947.”

  27. PA, B 42, Band 1327; AS, Dedijer, t. e. 215.

  28. Bilandžić, Povijest izbliza, 78; Bilandžić, Hrvatska moderna povijest, 536.

  29. Latinka Perović, Zatvaranje kruga: Ishod razcepa (Sarajevo: Svjetlost, 1991), 90;
    Olivera Milosavljević, Činjenice i tumačenja (Belgrade: Helsinški odbor za ljudska prava
    u Srbiji, 2010), 62.

Free download pdf